January 18, 1975 * Teenage JL?. Dear Liz: I am 14 years of age and have not-had one date jn my life. It'.is not because boys Beauty Cen _ Featured-Hairdo # ?1 PEF 2500 N. Li | Call For An I Phone: ^724-68 SH< CHARGE LAY-AWAY I#5P m I I ,, , ?i i . i ii ? i . i 11 i i i? ?i ' i ? ' i < ????? don't find me attractive and ask me for dates, btrt my parents are "old fashion" and says, I can't receive dates iter & Salon 1 maturing All Major Lines f Black Cosmetics: Ultra Sheen Clairol Vlgotol Revlon and many others Magnificent Products IMS 815.95 berty Street Appointment er a Daughter ~)E SA1 1/2 PRICE or BETTER $ 522I to $1122 Reg. to $22. ????MM il ? el MOTHER - OAUGtf ? STORE ? ? < ? i . . . ,' . , , , , Winston-Salem Chronicle , e For Date until 1 am 15. Liz, that's a - whole year and 1 am afraid 1 ?can't?wait that long. AVhat should 1 do?-- Worried Teenager but I think you should wait for your parents permission to date. Remember, "anything worth having is worth waiting for." Dear Liz: .1 have a problem. My boyfriend has a body odor which is very noticeable. I Hnn't wnnt tn hurt hie ....... .v nun a vvuil^St so as a hint, I have given him several bottles of expensive men's cologne. He won't wear - any^of them. He says they make him smell. What should I do? ?Nosey Dear Nosey? Instead of accentuating the postive. try eliminating the negative by giving tiirn a bar of soap. LE!! 1 l/ST w\ r I ~ v Many Styles Colors to I Choose From 1 \ wm?mm H 1 I jxi rriiii^^^KJ 'v mMmlm Jfc fll { I m ^-^^^Lwgsg^^K %> Li**nfci^^^^^^l Miss Naomi C. McLean is perhaps the most awarded Mack awns h winst""???t?"*- si? ?? <w?wrty hm ?? "huhim Resource in the United States of America." Many think of her as the world's greatest teacher. Chronicle Profile Best Teaehers JJsually HardestGood teachers are hard to comedy. They are the ones who won't let you get by with any old thing. They are always making you (the one everybody predicts will fail) do your work; no 'matter how well you fake a headache. The good teachers are usually the ones everybody remembers as the toughest. Later on inj life they are the^ones you love the most. Miss Naoimi C. McLean is thought of by many of her former students as "the best teacher I've ever had...and the strictest." Miss McLean, owner, operator, and founder of McLean's c* a. t- j m a ? ** ... - - oienograpmc ana i utoring services, is strict and dedicated. She believes in being strict and very positive with her students. "One^thing that cripples students," she said in a recent interview, "is when a teacher tells them they've done something good when they haven't. I think a teacher should be dedicated to her work so she can give the best to those who are coming to her for results. She should be so concerned that she will not just let a student pass, but cause the student to learn something." That philosophy is backed by more than 30 years of teaching and hundreds of letters from former students who have gone on to hppnmp rpcnnnci kto u;Ai?torc k\/ WWII! V I V>]^/Vlli]IUIV T* U1 IWI Miss McLean, a jovial person even though at times she tries to be tough, feels that a person should be really interested in his chosen field of work. She recalled a situation that illustrates that point well: "I had a beautician once who used to always burn my hair. I .wondered about that/' she said grimacing. "One day she was busy and another lady had to do my hair. Her regular beautician really didn't want to do that kind of work, but the other one did. "The one who didn't want to be a beautician always burned my hair. It's the same way with teachers; If you like your work, you'll do it well." She has done well with McLean's Stenographic and Tutoring Services. She founded the school in 1941. It was the first Business School for Negroes in Winston-Salem. She changed the name r mi ^ i ' - - ? ? irom i ne Mar Menographic School of Business to its' present name because it was misleading. "Schools and colleges are places where you have campuses and all," she said. 44Stenographic and tutoring services keeps it on a small level...1 didn't want to mislead people." Her list of accomplishments is more than a yard long. In 1953 she received a letter of inquiry from Royal Business Schools in New York City requesting her opinion concerning new methods in teaching shorthand. In 1960 she met the requirements and received certification as a Registered Certified Public Stenographer, later termed Registered Public Stenographer (RPS). She had, at that time, the distinction of being the only RPS in the city. In 1958 a Business program by Beta Alpha Chapter, Iota Phi Lamda Sorority was given in honor of Miss McLean and a plaque was awarded to her with gold engraving as the most outstanding Business Woman of the Year. She received the Professional Business League's Certificate as one of the outstanding woman achievers in the business world and related professional careers in 1972. "The stenographic service is valuable to people in all walks of life," she said proudly. Her many former students are proof of that.

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